How David Henry Hwang Wrote One of the Smartest Plays on Broadway by David Hwang

JOAN MARCUS

The playwright behind Yellow Face did more than just tell a story, he mined his own life for material.

“Laughter,” David Henry Hwang says, “is potentially a binding force in the theater. It allows us to relax around each other and feel more comfortable in the context of issues that sometimes make us squirm.”

What kind of issues might those be? In the case of Yellow Face, Hwang’s Pulitzer Prize-finalist play currently running at Broadway’s Todd Haimes Theatre through November 24, audiences can take their pick. The sharp, funny drama—which the New Yorker called “audacious and fresh”—takes inspiration from Hwang’s own life, beginning with his protests regarding the casting of a white actor to play a Eurasian role in the 1990 Broadway musical Miss Saigon, and tackles additional complications in the form of racial injustice on and off stage, family drama, and professional pitfalls, just to name a few. For anyone who still doesn’t feel just a bit uneasy, remember that the play’s main character (played by Daniel Dae Kim) is a playwright named DHH.

That’s just one place where real life and the world Yellow Face, which is directed by Leigh Silverman,depicts on stage differ. While the Hwang character in the show can come across as occasionally bumbling, in real life the Tony-winning playwright seems to know exactly what he’s doing.

“David really has experienced a lot, and he’s much more willing to put himself and his private life into the public, not only through his work but through his advocacy,” explains Kim. “He has had some interesting things happen to him that have fed his life, not just as a human being but as an artist, and I applaud his bravery in wanting to share that with audiences. It not only makes him an interesting character in life, but also on the page. It’s easy to see why he would want to take his own experiences and shift them only slightly to have them apply to all of us.”

Read more at Town and Country

Celebrities on the Broadway Stage by David Hwang

For decades, Broadway has welcomed film and TV's biggest stars as they headed to New York City for the chance to share in the intimate experience of performing in front of a live audience. This Broadway season is no exception.

Here are some of the celebrities who are spending time on the Broadway boards this season.

DANIEL DAY KIM in YELLOW FACE

Now Open; Closes November 24, 2024
Lost and Hawaii Five-0 favorite Daniel Dae Kim returns to Broadway in David Henry Hwang's Obie Award-winning and Pulitzer finalist farce about a playwright who protests yellowface casting in Miss Saigon, only to mistakenly cast a white actor as the Asian lead in his own play. 

Read more at Broadway.com

10 Pieces of Art in NYC You Should See, Daniel Dae Kim in David Henry Hwang's 'Yellowface' by David Hwang

Daniel Dae Kim stars in David Henry Hwang's farcical play "Yellowface," about an Asian American playwright who mistakenly casts a white actor in an Asian role in his own production. Kim and Hwang join us to discuss the production, which runs through November 24.

Read more at WNYC

Daniel Dae Kim to Perform at Dramatists Guild Foundation Gala by David Hwang

A starry lineup of artists are set to perform and appear at this year's Dramatists Guild Foundation (DGF) Gala, which will be held October 24 at the Ziegfeld Ballroom. The evening will celebrate writers and their work, with direction by Noah Himmelstein and music direction by Julianne Merrill.

Performers will include Daniel Dae Kim (Yellow Face), Nikki Renée Daniels (Once Upon a MattressCompany), Jeanna de Waal (Diana), Francis Jue (Yellow Face), and Jack Wolfe (Next to Normal). 

Read more at Playbill

David Henry Hwang Discusses His Play ‘Yellow Face,’ Now on Broadway by David Hwang

First produced off-Broadway in 2007, the work, more potent than ever, continues to speak to the times.

On October 30, playwright and School of the Arts faculty member David Henry Hwang and director Leigh Silverman will discuss Yellow Face, Hwang’s acclaimed comedy about identity, show business, and (perhaps) autobiography. Playwright and director James Ijames will moderate the discussion, which will be held at 7 pm at the Lenfest Center for the Arts, and School of the Arts Dean Sarah Cole will introduce the participants.

Yellow Face is making its Broadway debut at the Roundabout Theatre through November 24. Per the Playbill for this production, the play “is inspired by real events. The playwright’s fictionalized doppelgänger protests yellow-face casting in Miss Saigon, only to mistakenly cast a white actor as the Asian lead in his own play.”

Hwang discusses Yellow Face, its continued relevance, and his other work with Columbia News.

Read more at Columbia News

On the Red Carpet: At Yellow Face, David Henry Hwang on How He Turned His 'Flop' Into a Hit by David Hwang

In 1993, David Henry Hwang's comedy Face Value came to Broadway. It then abruptly left after just five performances, with critics panning it as "M. Turkey" (a reference to Hwang's previous hit M. Butterfly). In the years since, Hwang has referred to the play as a "flop." So it wasn't lost on Hwang October 1, at the opening of his play Yellow Face at the Todd Haimes Theatre, how far he'd come—especially when critics met Yellow Face with almost unanimous raves.

"In some ways, this is the end of a journey that began in 1993 when the predecessor to this play, Face Value, closed in previews on Broadway," the Tony Award-winning playwright told Playbill on the red carpet of Yellow Face. "So now, many decades later, to be able to open Yellow Face on Broadway just feels like the most amazing journey a show could have."

Read more at Playbill


Hear From Daniel Dae Kim, David Henry Hwang and the Stars of Broadway's Yellow Face on Opening Night by David Hwang

Yellow Face, David Henry Hwang's 2008 Pulitzer Prize finalist, is having its Broadway premiere at Roundabout Theatre Company's Todd Haimes Theatre, directed by Leigh Silverman. Daniel Dae Kim stars as DHH, a semi-autobiographical take on Hwang himself, who protests the white-washing of Broadway's Miss Saigon only to cast a white actor as an Asian man in one of his own plays. 

Speaking to The Broadway Show on the opening-night red carpet, Hwang shared the two biggest reasons Yellow Face has been surprising its audiences: "Number one, how funny Daniel Dae Kim is," he said. "And number two, that there's a combination of stuff to laugh about, stuff to cry about and stuff to think about." 

Read more and watch video at Broadway.com

See Daniel Dae Kim and the Stars of Yellow Face Hit the Red Carpet for the Play's Long-Awaited Broadway Premiere by David Hwang

Playwright David Henry Hwang, director Leigh Silverman and Daniel Dae Kim (Photo by Sergio Villarini for Broadway.com)

Yellow Face—David Henry Hwang's semi-autobiographical satire inspired by the playwright's protest of yellow face in the Broadway production of Miss Saigon and his subsequent 1993 flop, Face Value—opened on Broadway at the Todd Haimes Theatre on October 1. A Pulitzer Prize finalist, the play premiered in Los Angeles in 2007, followed by an off-Broadway run at the Public Theater helmed by Leigh Silverman, who reunites with Hwang for its Broadway production.

Daniel Dae Kim leads the cast as Hwang's theatrical rendering (called DHH in the play), along with Francis Jue as Hwang's father (HYH), Ryan Eggold as Marcus (the white man DHH accidentally casts as an Asian character in Face Value) and an ensemble of shape-shifting actors including Greg Keller, Marinda Anderson, Kevin Del Aguila and Shannon Tyo.

See the Broadway company walk the red carpet on opening night.

Read and see more at Broadway.com

Interview with YELLOW FACE Playwright David Henry Hwang by David Hwang

In my exclusive interview with David Henry Hwang, we talked about Yellow Face, An American Soldier, Soft Power, M. Butterfly, the opera, and Ainadamar with Osvaldo Golijov which will be seen at the Metropolitan Opera in Oct. Roundabout Theatre Company is presenting Yellow Face by David Henry Hwang directed by Leigh Silverman, at the Todd Haimes Theatre, 227 West 42nd Street, between 7th and 8th Avenues in New York through November 24. Yellow Face features Daniel Dae Kim as “DHH,”

Read and watch more at Youtube

Daniel Dae Kim used to camp out for discounted theater tickets by David Hwang

Daniel Dae Kim (Joan Marcus)

Returning to Broadway feels full circle for Kim, who is best known for TV shows like “Lost” and “Hawaii Five-0” but got his start on more experimental corners of the New York stage after earning a degree from NYU. This time, instead of waiting in line for discounted seats, he’s center stage in “Yellow Face,” a play about a case of mistaken racial identity, as well as a backstage comedy.

“Not to get sentimental, but the first day I was in the Todd Haimes Theatre, I looked out on the stage, and I remember that 21-year-old young man who would who would get TKTS tickets and sit in the balcony just to be able to see these wonderful plays and these amazing performers,” Kim said.

“Yellow Face” chronicles (and satirizes) Hwang’s experience leading the 1991 protest against the casting of white actor Jonathan Pryce in the Asian role of “Miss Saigon.” Since then, Hwang notes, casting decisions have changed for the better. For instance, every subsequent production of “Miss Saigon” has featured an Asian actor in the role that Pryce originated.

Read more at Variety

Interview: David Henry Hwang on ‘Yellow Face,’ Its Ongoing Relevance, and More by David Hwang

Hwang discusses his expectations for the autobiographical play now that it’s on Broadway.

David Henry Hwang’s playfully subversive comedy Yellow Face received an Obie Award and was shortlisted for a Pulitzer Prize when it debuted off-Broadway at the Public Theater in 2007. Now it’s back—in a new Broadway revival directed by Leigh Silverman, the Tony-nominated director of Shaina Taub’s freewheeling musical Suffs. In what Hwang calls an “unreliable memoir,” the playwright—who won the Tony in 1988 for M. Butterfly—places a fictional version of himself, “DHH,” at the center of the story.

The play takes audiences on a clever and humorous journey that blurs fact and fiction. It revisits historical events sparked by the 1990 controversy surrounding the yellow-face casting of a white actor, Jonathan Pryce, in the lead Eurasian role in the mega-musical Miss Saigon. The work also examines allegations made against his father, Henry Y. Hwang, and the increasing prejudice faced by Asian Americans in this country. Portrayed as “HYH” in the play, Hwang’s father, a banker, saw his cherished version of the American dream unravel due to racist-tinged investigations into campaign donations that targeted him in the late 1990s.

The current Broadway revival of Yellow Face features Daniel Dae Kim (of Lost and Hawaii Five-O fame) as the author’s stand-in and Obie Award-winning actor Francis Jue as Hwang’s father. I recently spoke with the playwright about his autobiographical meta-theatrical creation.

Read more and watch interview at Slant Magazine

Get a 1st Look at Production Photos From David Henry Hwang's Yellow Face on Broadway by David Hwang

Daniel Dae Kim is starring in the Roundabout Theatre Company production.

Previews began September 13 for Roundabout Theatre Company's Broadway production of Yellow Faceby David Henry Hwang, and the first production photos are in. Opening night is set for October 1 at the Todd Haimes Theatre. The limited engagement will continue through November 24.

Directed by Leigh Silverman, Yellow Face stars Daniel Dae Kim as DHH, Kevin Del Aguila as Actor A, Ryan Eggold as Marcus, Francis Jue as HYH and Others, Marinda Anderson as Actor B, Greg Keller as Reporter/NWOAC, and Shannon Tyo as Leah and Others.

Inspired by real events, the playwright's fictionalized doppelgänger DHH (Kim) leads protests against yellowface casting in Miss Saigon, but then mistakenly casts a white actor as the Asian lead in one of his own plays.

Read more and watch video at Playbill

Screen star Daniel Dae Kim returns to the stage in the Broadway premiere of 'Yellow Face' by David Hwang

Screen star Daniel Dae Kim returns to the stage in the Broadway premiere of 'Yellow Face'

Nearly two decades after its debut off-Broadway at The Public Theater, “Yellow Face” by Tony Award-winner David Henry Hwang is now on Broadway.

The production features screen star Daniel Dae Kim as the central character "DHH".

"On Stage" host Frank DiLella caught up with Kim, Hwang and director Leigh Silverman to talk about the Broadway premiere of “Yellow Face.”

Read more and watch video at NY1

How to Listen to David Henry Hwang's YELLOW FACE From Home by David Hwang

Now in previews at the Todd Haimes Theatre is David Henry Hwang's comedy Yellow Face, which at last makes its Broadway debut following an off-Broadway premiere in 2006. Roundabout Theatre Company is presenting the play, which is directed by Leigh Silverman.

"I thought this was a comedy that would mostly be for Asian audiences. It's very gratifying that over the years it's grown in stature, it's been done around, and the culture has moved too," Hwang recently told BroadwayWorld. "So, when we did a reading of the version for Audible last year we discovered 'Oh, it's even funnier now!' because the issues that are the heart of it that powered the comedy are so much more central to our culture. It's really exciting to now be getting to do this on Broadway for you know a mainstream theater audience."

That's right! For those who cannot make it to New York City to see the play in person, you're in luck, because Audible released an audio version earlier this year and both star Daniel Dae Kim and Francis Jue. And for anyone who has already bought tickets, you can have a whole new experience with a mostly different cast by listening to the recorded version.

Read more at Broadway World

Photos: Daniel Dae Kim & More in YELLOW FACE on Broadway by David Hwang

Next up from Roundabout Theatre Company is the new production of Yellow Face by David Henry Hwang directed by Leigh Silverman, which will open at the Todd Haimes Theatre on October 1. Check out a first look at the cast in action!

Yellow Face will feature Daniel Dae Kim as “DHH,” Kevin Del Aguila as “Actor A,” Ryan Eggold as “Marcus,” Francis Jue as “HYH & Others,” Marinda Anderson as “Actor B,” Greg Keller as “Reporter/NWOAC,” and Shannon Tyo as “Leah & Others.” Meet the cast of Yellow Face below!

Inspired by real events, the playwright’s fictionalized doppelgänger protests yellowface casting in Miss Saigon, only to mistakenly cast a white actor as the Asian lead in his own play. This Obie Award-winning and Pulitzer finalist play is a laugh-out-loud farce about the complexities of race.

Read more at Broadway World

October 2024 New York Theater Openings by David Hwang

Below is a selection of theater opening* in New York in October, including five shows on Broadway, four of them revivals (or classics), with starry casts, many of whom are making their debuts or long-awaited returns:  Jim Parsons, Ephraim Sykes, Richard Thomas, Zoey Deutch (these first four among the many in “Our Town”), Daniel Day Kim, Juliana Margulies, Nicole Scherzinger, Kit Carson and Rachel Ziegler (these last two in Romeo + Juliet).ber 1

Yellow Face (Roundabout’s Todd Haimes Theater)
Daniel Dae Kim stars in David Henry Hwang’s 2007 comedy, which finally makes it to Broadway, a semi-fictionalized dramatization of three events in the playwright’s life: his protest against the performance of a non-Asian actor as an Asian character (a practice referred to as yellowface) in Miss Saigon; the failure of his 1993 play, “Face Value”; and a Senate investigation that targeted Asian Americans including his father.
September 13 – November 24

Read more at New York Theater

Ainadamar, by Osvaldo Golijov by David Hwang

The Argentinian composer Osvaldo Golijov’s 80-minute opera Ainadamar (Fountain of Tears) unfolds chiefly in the head of the aged actress Margarita Xirgu (Angel Blue), in her youth a muse to the incendiary Spanish playwright Federico García Lorca (Daniela Mack). Beginning in pulsating flamenco, the score dissolves in the end to an ethereal trio inspired by the precedent of Richard Strauss in Der Rosenkavalier, the third voice in Golijov’s mix being that of Nuria, Xirgu’s brilliant protégée. The flamenco singer Alfredo Tejado appears (but not in the trio) as the Falangist politician who takes charge of Lorca’s execution, an event that David Henry Hwang’s libretto borrows from the historic record. What’s the whole fantasy about? Oh, just life, death, art, self-immolation.

Read more at Airmail News

Daniel Dae Kim to Keynote at Variety's Business of Broadway Breakfast by David Hwang

Variety has announced programming for its annual Business of Broadway Breakfast, presented by City National Bank, on September 30 in New York. The event, hosted by Cole Escola of "Oh, Mary!," will celebrate the upcoming season of Broadway with conversations from cast members and directors of "Sunset Boulevard," "Yellow Face," and "Our Town."

The event will also include a keynote from Daniel Dae Kim and David Henry Hwang of "Yellow Face," as well as one with Jim Parsons, Zoey Deutch, Michelle Wilson, and Ephraim Sykes of "Our Town."

Read more at MSM